Merton & Buddhism
Edited by Bonnie Bowman Thurston
Fons Vitae ($26.95)
Thomas Feverel Merton was born in
Prades, France, on January 31, 1915. In 1941, a Masters Degree from
Columbia University in hand, he entered the Abbey of Our Lady of
Gethsemani, a Trappist monastery in Kentucky. One would think, as
Merton’s friends did, that a medieval monastery would be the
wrong place for a young man with a thirst to write, but after an
unstable adolescence, the newly-converted Catholic had a calling
to the silence and discipline of monastic life. Seven years later
Merton’s autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain,
it’s title gleaned from Dante’s Purgatorio,
was published and became a best-seller. Over the decades, Merton
blossomed into a poet, photographer, and literary critic—along
with, to the chagrin of the Church, a voice in the Civil Rights and
Anti-Vietnam War movements of the 1960s, and a supporter of Liberation
Theology in Latin America. At the same time, his spiritual quest,
always the crux of his life, expanded to include not only the study
of other religions, but the practice of Zen Buddhist meditation.
The story of this amazing man—whose life ended prematurely on December
10, 1968, when at a conference in Bangkok he touched a faulty electric fan—has
been told in many books and from many angles. Indeed, Merton & Buddhism,
a collection of essays, is one in a series of such books published by Fons
Vitae. This one, however, is a particularly valuable contribution to the blossoming
field of Merton Studies because atheistic Buddhism, a world religion with philosophically
sophisticated texts and meditation practices that center on the nature of reality,
has for centuries posed a particular challenge to the supernatural beliefs
of Christians.
In 1955, Merton wrote to his friend
and publisher, James Laughlin, “Have you ever run across any
books by D. Suzuki (I think that is how you spell him) on Zen Buddhism?
I am anxious to track some of them down and have them.” D.T.
Suzuki, who had had some formal Zen training before arriving in the
U.S. as a translator, became the first philosopher of Zen Buddhism
to write in English. His books rang with authority, mysticism, and
spiritual adventure. In Suzuki’s entertaining stories, monks
often become suddenly enlightened; while, in reality, most go through
many years of arduous training and only rarely did Suzuki refer to
zazen, the sitting meditation around which a Zen monk’s days
revolve. Could it be that Suzuki, like many Japanese Buddhist teachers
of the time, thought that Westerners weren’t mentally and physically
tough enough for Zen’s demanding practice? If so, he made an
exception with Merton, who was already used to monastic life. Suzuki
and Merton exchanged letters, and in 1964 Merton obtained permission
from his abbot to visit Suzuki, who was in New York to lecture at
Merton’s alma mater. For Merton, this was an momentous occasion.
Suzuki was familiar with Christianity,
especially the apophatic, “mysticism of midnight illumination,” tradition
exemplified by Meister Eckhart and St. John of the Cross, which was
the path Merton had chosen. In addition, the Zen which Suzuki popularized
was made for a Judeo-Christian audience: the stories of sudden enlightenment
were his version of Christian grace. In his essay, “The Limits
of Thomas Merton’s Understanding of Buddhism,” John P.
Keenan writes, “Although Zen was indeed a tried and tattered
school of Chinese and Japanese Buddhism, Suzuki and others began
to characterize it as transcending sectarian boundaries.” One
result of the misunderstanding that Zen can be separated from Buddhism
is the voluminous publication of books on everything from business
to cooking that use Zen in their title. Even more pernicious is that
there is now at least one Catholic priest (Robert Kennedy, S.J.,
Roshi) who calls himself a Zen Master. Doing zazen, or other Buddhist
mediation practices, differs from living the life of a Buddhist,
with its insight into the interdependency of all phenomena without
Divine intervention.
Merton was a man who made creative
leaps and his relationship with Catholicism was as poet as well as
priest. Although Christian commentators quote him saying that he
would never leave the Church, in truth, we will never know. The beginning
of this book quotes him: “I am just beginning to awaken and
to realize how much more awakening is to come.” During the
last months of his life, he met the Dalai Lama and several Tibetan
meditation masters. In his long essay, “Merton, Suzuki, Zen,
Ink: Thomas Merton’s Calligraphic Drawings in Context,” Roger
Lipsky writes that when he met the Tibetans, Merton “knew that
he was among brothers.” Living in the world again, even his
preference in Buddhist sects was mutable. The simplicity of Japanese
Zen Buddhism, which reflected how he lived his life in the monastery
and subsequent hermitage, was morphing into Tibetan Buddhism’s
intricate visualizations.
In a book that contributes many
essays important to Merton Studies, the section titled “Footnotes
to the Asian Journey of Thomas Merton” brings us up to date.
For this, Roger Lipsky recently interviewed James George, who was
Canada’s High Commissioner in India when he met Merton shortly
before his death. George remembers Merton as being “so alive
that one felt his humanness and at the same time his sensibility.” He
goes on to say: “The breadth of his view was not contained
within any cloister or any one tradition. The search probing what
it means to be a real human being is beyond that.”
© Rain Taxi 2007